652 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2

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1 Blake V. It s an ART not a Science: State-Mandated Insurance Coverage of Assisted Reproductive Technologies and Legal Implications for Gay and Unmarried Persons. Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology. 2011;12(2): It s an ART not a Science: State-Mandated Insurance Coverage of Assisted Reproductive Technologies and Legal Implications for Gay and Unmarried Persons Valarie Blake* I. INTRODUCTION II. BACKGROUND: USAGE, ACCESS, AND COST IN ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY A. Definitions and Technology B. Popularity of ART C. Purse Strings and Parenthood: Cost as a Barrier to ART D. Proposed Economic Solutions to Access Issues in ART III. REGULATION OF ART AND MANDATED 2011 Valarie Blake. * Valarie Blake is the Senior Research Associate with the American Medical Association s Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, part of Ethics Group, where she assists the Council in researching and developing policy around ethical and legal topics of medical interest. She also teaches a course on health law and policy for the Medical College of Wisconsin/AMA medical ethics fellowship for physicians, in addition to working with the AMA's Virtual Mentor publication. Prior to joining the AMA, Valarie completed the Cleveland Fellowship in Advanced Bioethics. While there, Valarie focused on ethical and legal issues in assisted reproductive technology and reproductive tissue transplant, as well as regulatory issues in research ethics. Valarie has a Juris Doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law with a Certificate in Health Law and concentrations in bioethics and global health. She also received a Masters in Arts in Bioethics from Case Western Reserve University. Her bachelor s degree was in neuroscience from the University of Pittsburgh. 651

3 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 653 I. INTRODUCTION The last several decades have witnessed a dramatic change in how our society conceives of family, parenthood, pregnancy, childbirth, and gender roles. One issue at the heart of this change was the successful uncoupling of intercourse from reproduction via assisted reproductive technology (ART). 1 ART has made it possible for a wealth of individuals, who would otherwise be unable, to create families and become parents. 2 Traditionally, most people think of infertile couples as the beneficiaries of such technology, but ART has special and important implications for gay and/or unmarried persons as well. 3 Dubbed the structurally infertile, this latter group, if desirous of reproducing, must do so through means other than sexual intercourse because of the social structure in which they self-identify. 4 Despite the growth in popularity of ART for both the medically and structurally infertile, ART continues to be a mainly private-payer enterprise, reserved for those individuals who have the expendable income to pay for these expensive technologies. 5 Given both the high demand for ART as well as the astronomically high cost for some ART procedures, some states have begun mandating insurance coverage as a means of ensuring that a wider range of people are able to access reproductive technologies. 6 While much focus has been on whether insurance should be mandated for such procedures, little attention has been paid to the unusual consequences of mandated insurance for consumers of ART, particularly gay and unmarried persons. Of the fourteen states with some form of insurance mandate, none explicitly excludes gay or 1. Marjorie Maguire Shultz, Reproductive Technology and Intent-Based Parenthood: An Opportunity for Gender Neutrality, 1990 WIS. L. REV. 297, Id. at Id. at Judith F. Daar, Accessing Reproductive Technologies: Invisible Barriers, Indelible Harms, 23 BERKELEY J. GENDER L. & JUST. 18, 24 (2008). 5. Debora Spar & Anna M. Harrington, Building a Better Baby Business, 10 MINN. J.L. SCI. & TECH. 41, (2009). 6. Note, In Vitro Fertilization: Insurance and Consumer Protection, 109 HARV. L. REV. 2092, (1996) [hereinafter In Vitro Fertilization].

4 654 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 unmarried persons from coverage, but many serve to indirectly exclude these groups, raising distinct ethical and legal issues around what a state owes its citizens with respect to insurance coverage of ART. 7 Even more legally problematic is the implicit exclusion of persons who are not only structurally infertile, but also have a medical cause for their infertility. For purposes of this Article, I will call this group the medico-structurally infertile. Taken both individually and as a whole, these regulations raise significant questions as to the purpose of state mandates for ART. Further questions relate to the intentions of such laws with respect to unmarried and gay persons and the political, religious, and health justice issues related to marital status, reproduction, sexual orientation, resource allocation, and health. This Article explores the legal and ethical tensions between the purpose of health insurance, the desire to improve access to ART for everyone, and the unique legal and ethical implications of state-mandated insurance for structurally infertile and medico-structurally infertile persons. Part II provides an overview of the types of technologies that qualify as ART, as well as statistics on the types of groups accessing or interested in accessing ART. In this section, the high cost of ART, methods of payment, and the role of cost as a barrier to access are also explored. State mandates for insurance coverage are set forth in Part III, and statutory language of individual mandates is used to demonstrate two types of limits on state mandates: external limits, such as limits on dollar amounts or numbers of procedures, and internal limits, which limit treatments based on the social status of the individual. The various implicit exclusions of gay and unmarried persons are also explored. Part IV sets forth some of the legal challenges raised by implicit exclusion of insurance coverage for these groups. Due Process, Equal Protection, and Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) challenges are each discussed. In Part V, the context of state-mandated insurance coverage for ART is explored in the broader framework of health justice, resource allocation, religious and political considerations with respect to sexual orientation, marital status, and the purposes of health 7. Nicole Rank, Comment, Barriers for Access to Assisted Reproductive Technologies by Lesbian Women: The Search for Parity Within the Healthcare System, 10 HOUS. J. HEALTH L. & POL Y 115, (2009).

5 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 655 insurance. Health justice is used as the main rationale for arguing that gay and unmarried persons should be granted insurance coverage for ART under state mandates. Lastly, in Part VI, the advantages and disadvantages of state-mandated insurance versus an alternative mechanism of tax deductions are explored with particular attention paid to the implications of these mechanisms for gay and unmarried persons. Concluding that state mandates are currently the best solution for ensuring wider access to ART for everyone, the Article encourages legislatures to consider a number of important ethical, legal, and social factors in drafting state mandates for insurance coverage of ART and in ensuring fair access for gay and unmarried persons. II. BACKGROUND: USAGE, ACCESS, AND COST IN ASSISTED REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY A. DEFINITIONS AND TECHNOLOGY The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) defines ART, widely known as ART, as all fertility treatments in which both eggs and sperm are handled. 8 In this way, ART is designed to enable conception... when coital reproduction is either not possible or not desirable. 9 ART encompasses a number of specific techniques and procedures including: gamete intrafallopian transfer (GIFT), which is the placing of eggs and sperm into the fallopian tubes; zygote intrafallopian transfer (ZIFT), which is the placing of a zygote in the fallopian tubes; and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), which is the direct insertion of an individual sperm into the ovum, a technique often used to remedy male-factor infertilities. 10 Invitro fertilization (IVF) is the most complex, invasive, and expensive of all the ARTs. 11 IVF begins with hormone therapy given to the woman to induce ovulation, followed by egg 8. Assisted Reproductive Technology, CTRS. FOR DISEASE CONTROL & PREVENTION, (last updated Oct. 21, 2010). 9. Justyn Lezin, (Mis)conceptions: Unjust Limitations on Legally Unmarried Women s Access to Reproductive Technology and their Use of Known Donors, 14 HASTINGS WOMEN S L.J. 185, 190 (2003). 10. Spar & Harrington, supra note 5, at See Daar, supra note 4, at 20 n.3 (describing the procedural steps necessary for IVF); Elizabeth A. Pendo, The Politics of Infertility: Recognizing Coverage Exclusions as Discrimination, 11 CONN. INS. L.J. 293, 300 (2005) (suggesting that IVF is more complex than another form of artificial insemination); Schultz, supra note 1, at 339 n.125.

6 656 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 retrieval and fertilization of the eggs with semen, incubation of the fertilized egg(s) in a laboratory dish for several days until an embryo is formed, and, lastly, the transplant of the embryo directly into the uterus. 12 All of the above technologies may or may not involve the use of gamete donors (third parties that donate eggs and sperm), 13 cryopreservation and storage of gametes, 14 and/or gestational surrogates (third parties that gestate and birth the fetus), all of which are factors particularly relevant for gay and unmarried persons considering ART. 15 Though not considered an ART, artificial insemination, where sperm is transferred into a female s reproductive tract to produce pregnancy, 16 implicates ethical and legal challenges similar to that of ART, 17 and is also a popular method of pregnancy for lesbians and single women because it enables pregnancy without sexual intercourse with a male. 18 Different medical and structural needs, as well as gender issues, determine the type of ART one uses to become pregnant. Lesbian couples and single women may often achieve pregnancy through the simpler method of artificial insemination, if there are no medically-related problems. 19 Using a known or anonymous sperm donor, the single woman or lesbian woman can become pregnant with the use of her own eggs and can gestate the pregnancy, barring any medical barriers. 20 Gay or single men who wish to reproduce require the use of a gestational surrogate, who is impregnated by any of the techniques above using the sperm of the single man, one of the couple members, or a donor. 21 For structurally infertile 12. Pendo, supra note 11, at Shultz, supra note 1, at Daar, supra note 4, at 20 n Id. at James Ringo ed., Tenth Annual Review of Gender and Sexuality Law: Health Care Law Chapter: Assisted Reproductive Technologies, 10 GEO. J. GENDER & L. 859, (2009). 17. Rank, supra note 7, at See id. at 130 (suggesting that many women find greater success with physician-assisted insemination than with self-insemination). 19. See Bebe J. Anderson, Lesbians, Gays, and People Living with HIV: Facing and Fighting Barriers to Assisted Reproduction, 15 CARDOZO J.L. & GENDER 451, (2009) (suggesting that artificial insemination is particularly relevant to lesbians, and that it can be ceased if the donor is found to be HIV positive). 20. Id. 21. Id. at 453.

7 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 657 individuals or couples who also have medical infertility, the type of ART used depends on both the structural infertility as well as the type of medical infertility. 22 In these instances, the more expensive IVF and gestational surrogacy may be necessary. For example, a single woman with blocked fallopian tubes would require sperm donation because of her structural infertility, but would also require in-vitro fertilization because of her medical infertility. 23 B. POPULARITY OF ART The business of treating infertility is booming, with more than one million individuals seeking infertility treatment on an annual basis. 24 ART usage has rapidly increased over the last decade, with the number of ART cycles and babies born from ART doubling between 1996 and More than 54,000 babies were born in the United States with the help of assisted reproduction in 2006 alone, which accounts for more than one percent of U.S. births that year. 26 Scholars estimate that the business of assisted reproduction in the United States is at least a $1.7 billion market before even considering sperm sales, high-end eggs, legal fees, surrogacy, or adoption. 27 The ten percent of the population that suffers from medically-related infertility accounts for a significant portion of ART use. 28 Medical infertility affects both genders and occurs across all races, ethnic backgrounds, and socioeconomic levels. 29 The incidence of structural infertility... [however] is largely unknown, as no government surveys report such figures. 30 Data suggests, however, that structurally infertile persons are also finding ways, whether by ART or otherwise, to 22. Id. at (explaining differences in ART methods when a donor or surrogate is infected with HIV). 23. Rank, supra note 7, at Pendo, supra note 11, at Spar & Harrington, supra note 5, at Assisted Reproductive Technology Surveillance System, CTRS. FOR DISEASE CONTROL & PREVENTION, (last updated July 31, 2009). 27. Spar & Harrington, supra note 5 at See Daar, supra note 4, at 24, 34 (stating that 1.2 million medically infertile women sought ART in 2005, and that the majority of ART patients are heterosexual, married women). 29. Pendo, supra note 11, at Daar, supra note 4, at 25.

8 658 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 have families. 31 The rates of reproduction outside of heterosexual married relationships have been increasing in recent years. Approximately forty percent of births in the Unites States are now to single, unmarried women. 32 Additionally, the 1980s saw an increase in children born to lesbian women. The same increase occurred with gay men in the 1990s, causing the media to coin the term the gay baby boom. 33 Currently in the United States, there are an estimated six to fourteen million children being raised by at least one gay or lesbian parent, usually as a result of a heterosexual relationship. 34 [T]he 2000 Census Report documented a total of 594,000 households headed by same-sex couples; thirty-three percent of female same-sex households and twenty-two percent of male couples had children. 35 However, it is difficult to estimate the extent to which this trend in families raised by single or gay persons is due to ART versus other factors. 36 Newspaper accounts suggest that one-third of all [artificial insemination] consumers in the U.S. are unmarried women, indicating that there is a strong current of structurally infertile groups making use of ART. 37 The burgeoning market of ART is appealing to both medically infertile and structurally infertile groups as a means of creating genetic offspring. The next section will discuss some of the financial and access issues raised by ART for these groups. 31. Id. at The Ethics Comm. of the Am. Soc y for Reprod. Med., Access to Fertility Treatment by Gays, Lesbians, and Unmarried Persons, 92 FERTILITY & STERILITY 1190, 1190 (2009) [hereinafter ASRM]. 33. Catherine DeLair, Ethical, Moral, Economic and Legal Barriers to Assisted Reproductive Technologies Employed by Gay Men and Lesbian Women, 4 DEPAUL J. HEALTH CARE L. 147, (2000). 34. ASRM, supra note 32, at Daar, supra note 4, at See DeLair, supra note 33, at 147 (suggesting that most children being raised by gay men and lesbian women result from previously heterosexual relationships, but that the number of children born to gay and lesbian couples utilizing ART is rising). 37. Daar, supra note 4, at 25.

9 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 659 C. PURSE STRINGS AND PARENTHOOD: COST AS A BARRIER TO ART ART is a costly endeavor in the United States. Staniec and Webb aptly describe the situation when they say that, for many infertile couples, the question is not whether or not to have children, but rather [h]ow will we get pregnant? followed closely by [h]ow will we afford it? 38 The average cost of one cycle of IVF is more than $10,000 and it frequently takes multiple cycles to achieve pregnancy, with success rates decreasing with each try. 39 Cost for a successful delivery as a result of IVF is estimated at $66,667 if successful by the first cycle and as high as $114,286 if it takes six cycles. 40 These costs vary by a number of patient factors, but can be even higher when egg donation or gestational surrogacy is involved. 41 Other forms of ART, such as artificial insemination, are more affordable but still cost over $1,000 and do not work for everyone. 42 It is important to reiterate that, in the context of structural infertility, high-tech and expensive interventions may not always be necessary, but sometimes are. Single women and lesbians without medical infertility may become successfully pregnant with sperm donation, which is fairly inexpensive or may even be gifted. 43 Artificial insemination can be done at home at no cost or at a physician s office. 44 Multiple attempts 38. See J. Farley Ordovensky Staniec & Natalie J. Webb, Utilization of Infertility Services: How Much Does Money Matter, 42 HEALTH SERV. RES. 971, (2007). 39. Spar & Harrington, supra note 5, at See id. 41. Donor eggs typically cost between $3,000 and $5,000 with an average IVF cycle then costing between $15,000 and $25,000. Some small portion of these eggs known colloquially as Ivy League or designer eggs fetched in the range of $25,000 to $ 50,000. Id. at 47. Gestational surrogacy is also an expensive endeavor. Currently, the typical fee for a first time surrogate mother ranges from $14,000 to $18,000, with an average of $15,000. Jennifer Watson, Growing a Baby for Sale or Merely Renting a Womb: Should Surrogate Mothers be Compensated for their Services?, 6 WHITTIER J. CHILD & FAM. ADVOC. 529, 531 (2007). This payment may be significantly higher where the surrogate agrees to additional medical tests or to carry or implant multiple fetuses. See id. at See Melissa B. Jacoby, Show Me the Money: Making Markets in Forbidden Exchange: The Debt Financing of Parenthood, 72 LAW & CONTEMP. PROB. 147, 149 (2009). 43. See DeLair, supra note 33, at See id.

10 660 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 however, may cost thousands of dollars. 45 Furthermore, gay or single men must rely on gestational surrogacy and may require egg donation, both of which are very expensive practices. 46 Certainly, too, any such individuals who experience some medical infertility may also require IVF or other more invasive and costly forms of ART. In addition, while some people advocate adoption as an alternative to ART for the medically and/or structurally infertile, adoption can also be an expensive endeavor and does not satisfy the goals of creating a genetically-related child, which is important to some individuals or couples. 47 Furthermore, some laws prohibit certain structurally infertile persons, including gay and unmarried persons, from adopting children. 48 Not surprisingly, researchers have found that financial access... [has] significant effects on the probability of seeking infertility treatments. 49 Income and insurance coverage of infertility services are two of the major predictors for seeking infertility treatment, and few individuals have fertility treatments like ART covered under their healthcare plans. 50 International surveys of foreign countries also indicate that cost plays a large role in access to ART. Nations with national health care systems report higher rates of infertility helpseeking. 51 In the United States, where the cost of treatment is 45. Id. 46. After medical and legal bills are calculated, the entire final cost of a surrogacy arrangement may be $20,000 $30,000 or more. Id. at Adoption costs vary greatly depending on the type of adoption and the characteristics of the child. While foster-care adoptions can be relatively inexpensive, some adoptions can cost as much as $30,000 or more. Additionally, foreign adoptions can also be time-consuming and expensive. See Jacoby, supra note 42, at For example, in Utah, [i]n order to adopt, you must be an adult who is either married (and has permission from your spouse) or single (and not cohabiting with another person). This requirement rules out individuals who are gay and individuals who are unmarried but cohabitating with a partner. Domestic Law Handbook, UTAH LEGAL SERVS., (last modified Aug. 10, 2009). 49. Staniec & Webb, supra note 38, at Lynn K. White et al., Explaining Disparities in Treatment Seeking: The Case of Infertility, 85 FERTILITY & STERILITY 853, 855 (2006). The role that insurance coverage plays in increasing access to ART will be discussed in more depth later in this paper. 51. Id.

11 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 661 paid out-of-pocket, only one-half of all infertile women seek treatment. 52 In contrast, other developed nations which cover infertility treatment have much higher rates of access. 53 The high cost of ART and its impact on access have led many to challenge the system as inherently inequit[able]. 54 One scholar claims that only a fortunate few can afford to spend $50,000, much less $100,000, in order to have a chance at a baby... [m]any couples are forced out of the baby business from the outset. 55 Another critiques the field of assisted reproduction as relying on the emotional desperation of childless couples to inflate the asking price and argues that ART provide[s] choice for affluent middle-class couples... however, the same privilege is denied to the less affluent. 56 Furthermore, worrisome practices exist among the eightyfive percent of infertile individuals who do choose to pay for these technologies out-of-pocket. They will mortgage their houses, sell their cars, deplete the family savings or sign up for a host of credit cards and charg[e] up to their credit limit. 57 Banks are now even offering fertility market loans to eligible consumers. 58 D. PROPOSED ECONOMIC SOLUTIONS TO ACCESS ISSUES IN ART Mandated insurance coverage has been proposed as a means of reducing inequity in assisted reproduction and equalizing access across socioeconomic groups. The high demand for and costs of ART and the frequent need for multiple interventions all serve as disincentives for insurers to cover such procedures under health plans. Only one in four employers cover some form of fertility services, and ARTs, the most expensive fertility treatments, are unlikely to be 52. A. L. Greil & J. McQuillan, Help-Seeking Patterns among Subfecund Women, 22 J. REPROD. & INFANT PSYCHOL. 305, 312 tbl.2 (2004). 53. See Daar, supra note 4, at 37 (noting that infertile women seek treatment 67% of the time in Finland, 86% of the time in the Netherlands, and 72 95% of the time in the United Kingdom.). 54. Spar & Harrington, supra note 5, at Id. 56. Meena Lal, The Role of the Federal Government in Assisted Reproductive Technologies, 13 SANTA CLARA COMPUTER & HIGH TECH. L.J. 517, (1997). 57. Jacoby, supra note 42, at 150; see also Anna L. Benjamin, The Implications of Using the Medical Expense Deduction of I.R.C. 213 to Subsidize Assisted Reproductive Technology, 79 NOTRE DAME. L. REV. 1117, 1129 (2004). 58. See Jacoby, supra note 42, at 161.

12 662 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 included. 59 Lobbyists in favor of mandated insurance have encouraged reform at both the state and federal level. While federal reform has not yet been successful, efforts in the House of Representatives to mandate coverage for infertility still persist with the Family Building Act of The Act, which was introduced by Representative Anthony Weiner (D-NY), has been referred to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. 60 Additionally, since the 1980s, fourteen states have successfully mandated some type of insurance coverage for fertility treatment. 61 Among these fourteen states, most do not require broad insurance coverage of ART. Many exclude certain types of infertility or certain treatments (especially IVF, the most expensive treatment). 62 Additionally, many of these state mandates do not encompass employer-funded health benefit plans because of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act. 63 In states that mandate some form of coverage, rates of access to assisted reproduction have been significantly higher. 64 However, many people in these states are still left without coverage because they either do not have insurance or are covered by self-insured employers that fall outside of these mandates. 65 Additionally, many of these statutes implicitly bar unmarried or same sex couples from coverage, regardless of whether they have a medical infertility that might otherwise qualify under the statute. Lastly, because persons in same sex relationships are unable to legally marry in most states, they often cannot be covered under their partners insurance Benjamin, supra note 57, at Family Building Act of 2009, H.R. 697, 111th Cong. (2009), available at The act would have required any insurer covering impotence to also cover fertility treatment, but it failed to survive House subcommittees on health and labor-management relations and was stalled a month after it had been introduced in Congress. 61. Benjamin, supra note 57 at ; Aaron C. McKee, The American Dream Kids and a White Picket Fence: The Need for Federal Legislation to Protect the Insurance Rights of Infertile Couples, 41 WASHBURN L.J. 191, 205 (2001). 62. See Maren Minnaert & Melissa Tai, Fourth Annual Review of Gender and Sexuality Law: Family Law Chapter: Assisted Reproductive Technology, 4 GEO. J. GENDER & L. 299, (2002). 63. Benjamin, supra note 57, at Jacoby, supra note 42, at Id. 66. Rank, supra note 7, at 130.

13 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 663 III. REGULATION OF ART AND MANDATED INSURANCE COVERAGE To understand how medical and structural fertility are treated under the regulatory framework of ART, one must first understand the status of ART regulation more generally. Currently, federal laws provide little guidance on the practice or provision of ART to the public, including whether or not insurance providers are required to cover ART. The duty of regulating who can access ART and whether it should be paid for by insurance companies has mainly fallen to the individual states and, in some instances, the infertility treatment centers and providers. In the fourteen states that have enacted laws requiring insurers to cover diagnosis and/or treatment of infertility, there are varying levels of coverage depending on a number of factors. Factors such as the types of treatments covered by a mandate and how much of the treatment must be covered are, for our purposes, referred to as external factors. These external factors place limits on access to ART, regardless of who is seeking treatment. Factors determining who is permitted to seek treatment under a given mandate are referred to as internal factors because they base coverage decisions on the individual s personal characteristics, such as marriage status, sexual orientation, or medical disability. External factors include a number of limits on the scope of coverage provided under the mandates. For example, some mandates require that coverage be provided for fertility treatments, as seen in Arkansas, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, and West Virginia. 67 Other states, such as 67. Arkansas statute provides coverage only for IVF and does not mention other fertility treatments. ARK. CODE ANN (2004) (stating all health insurance companies shall include, as a covered expense, in vitro fertilization ). Connecticut s statute requires that health insurance policy shall provide coverage for the medically necessary expenses of... infertility. CONN. GEN. STAT. 38a-536 (West 2007). Hawaii mandates pregnancy-related benefits shall include in addition to any other benefits for treating infertility, a one-time only benefit for all outpatient expenses arising from in vitro fertilization. HAW. REV. STAT. 431:10A (2005). Illinois statute mandates that [n]o group policy... may be issued... unless the policy contains coverage for the diagnosis and treatment of infertility. 215 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/356m (West 2008). Maryland s statute mandates that [a]n entity... that provides pregnancy-related benefits may not exclude benefits for all outpatient expenses arising from in-vitro fertilization. MD.

14 664 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 California and Texas, only require that infertility treatment be offered. 68 Some states place limits that depend on the specific treatment in question. For instance, California and New York have expressly excluded IVF from the fertility treatments covered, 69 while Arkansas specifically includes IVF but does not identify other fertility treatments. 70 A number of the states limit coverage by placing a maximum dollar amount or by limiting the number of procedures that are covered. 71 CODE ANN., INS (LexisNexis 2006). Massachusetts requires any blanket or general policy of insurance shall provide, to the same extent that benefits are provided for other pregnancy-related procedures, coverage for medically necessary expenses of diagnosis and treatment of infertility. MASS. ANN. LAWS ch. 175, 47H (LexisNexis 2008). Montana requires health maintenance organizations to cover basic health services which are defined to include infertility services. MONT. CODE ANN (2009). New Jersey mandates that group health insurance policy shall provide coverage which includes, but is not limited to, the following services related to infertility. N.J. STAT. 17:48-6x (West 2008). New York s statute states that [e]very policy which provides coverage for hospital care shall not exclude coverage... solely because the medical condition results in infertility. N.Y. INSURANCE LAW 3216 (2010). Ohio requires health maintenance organizations to cover basic health services, which include infertility services. OHIO REV. CODE ANN (A)(1)(h) (LexisNexis 2009). Rhode Island requires any health insurance contract shall provide coverage for medically necessary expenses of diagnosis and treatment of infertility. R.I. GEN. LAWS (2008). West Virginia requires health maintenance organizations to cover basic health care services, which includes infertility services. W. VA. CODE 33-25A-2(1) (LexisNexis 2006). See generally State Laws Related to Insurance Coverage for Infertility Treatment, NAT L CONF. OF STATE LEGISLATURES, Laws/tabid/14391/Default.aspx (last updated September 2010) [hereinafter NCSL]. 68. See CAL. HEALTH & SAF. CODE (West 2008) (requiring that every health care service plan... shall offer coverage for the treatment of infertility, except in vitro fertilization ); TEX. INS. CODE (West 2009) (stating that an issuer of a group health benefit plan that provides pregnancy-related benefits... shall offer and make available... coverage for... expenses incurred... from in vitro fertilization procedures. ); see generally NCSL, supra note See CAL. HEALTH & SAF. CODE (West 2008) ( [e]very health care service plan... shall offer coverage for the treatment of infertility, except in vitro fertilization. ); N.Y. INS. LAW 3216 (3)(E)(i) (2010) (stating that [c]overage shall not be required to include... in vitro fertilization ). 70. The Arkansas statute provides that health plans shall include, as a covered expense, in vitro fertilization. ARK. CODE ANN (2004). 71. For example, Hawaii provides only a one-time benefit for all outpatient expenses arising from in vitro fertilization. HAW. REV. STAT. 431:10A (2005). Maryland places a limit at three in vitro fertilization

15 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 665 Additionally, some states only offer more expensive procedures such as IVF as a last resort and require that the patient undergo less expensive procedures first. 72 Some statutes also place limits on the types of plans that must cover certain infertility treatments. For example, Ohio s mandate only applies to health maintenance organizations (HMOs), 73 and other states allow religious institutions to opt out of coverage that is inconsistent with the religious organization s religious and ethical principles. 74 For the most part, state insurance mandates based on external factors apply equally to all individuals. While such external factors are important with respect to individuals access to ART, it is those laws that use internal factors to determine insurance coverage that are most significant with respect to the rights of gay and/or unmarried persons. These states insurance mandates contain one or more of the following preconditions: (1) requirements that a person engage in unprotected sexual intercourse for a particular number of years without pregnancy, (2) requirements that the experience of infertility last a particular number of years, (3) use of spousal language, (4) requirements that the cause of infertility be either medically caused or unexplained, and (5) requirements that the infertility treatment be medically necessary. Tables 1a and 1b describe which states require which preconditions. These preconditions often translate into unequal access to mandated insurance coverage on the basis of marriage status, sexual orientation, and/or medical disability. Resulting legal attempts per live birth, not to exceed a maximum lifetime benefit of $100,000. MD. CODE ANN., INS (5)(d) (LexisNexis 2006). Illinois limits oocyte retrieval to four, or two extra if a live birth follows oocyte retrieval. 215 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/356m (West 2008) New Jersey limits to four oocyte retrievals in a lifetime. N.J. STAT. 17:48-6x (West 2008). Connecticut makes separate lifetime limits on cycles for each type of fertility treatment covered. CONN. GEN. STAT. 38a-536 (West 2007). 72. New Jersey limits availability to those who have used all reasonable, less expensive, and medically appropriate treatments. N.J. Stat. 17:48-6x (West 2008). Illinois statute states that coverage for IVF, GIFT and ZIFT is only available where the covered individual has been unable to attain or sustain a successful pregnancy though reasonable, less costly... treatments. 215 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/356m (West 2008). 73. Ohio law requires health maintenance organizations to cover basic health services which include infertility services., OHIO REV. CODE ANN (A)(1)(h) (LexisNexis 2009). 74. See e.g. CONN. GEN. STAT. 38a-536 (West 2007). Among states providing religious exemption are California, Connecticut, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, and Texas.

17 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE 667 A. STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION OF STATE MANDATES 1. Statutes That Require Sexual Relations Without Contraception Three states, California, 75 Illinois, 76 and New Jersey, 77 have statutory language requiring that individuals engage in a certain period of unprotected sex without successful pregnancy in order to qualify for mandated insurance coverage. The implications of this requirement are unclear for both structurally and medico-structurally infertile persons. While the drafters of the legislation may not have intended to extend coverage to [gay persons,]... it is conceivable that the language and definition may be construed to include such couples... through the acknowledgment that regular sexual relations could include sexual interactions between two people of the same sex. 78 However, the issue of what types of intercourse would be included is a matter for the legislature and the courts. Among these three states, New Jersey s language is the most exclusionary. The statute requires that the inability to conceive after the period of unprotected intercourse be caused by a disease or condition that results in the abnormal function of the reproductive system. 79 Gays, lesbians, and unmarried persons with structural infertility are not likely to be viewed as having abnormal functioning of their reproductive systems given the very definition of structural infertility. Medicostructurally infertile persons, however, would fall under this definition if they have proof of their medical condition. In contrast, California s statutory language does not 75. CAL. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE (b) (West 2008) ( [I]nfertility means either (1) the presence of a demonstrated condition recognized by a licensed physician... as a cause of infertility, or (2) the inability to conceive a pregnancy or to carry a pregnancy to a live birth after a year or more of regular sexual relations without contraception. (emphasis added)) ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/356m(2)(c) (West 2008) ( [I]nfertility means the inability to conceive after one year of unprotected sexual intercourse or the inability to sustain a successful pregnancy. ). 77. N.J. STAT. ANN. 17:48-6x (West 2008) ( [I]nfertility means the disease or condition that results in the abnormal function of the reproductive system such that a person is not able to: impregnate another person; conceive after two years of unprotected intercourse if the female partner is under 35 years of age, or one year of unprotected intercourse if the female partner is 35 years of age or older. ). 78. Rank, supra note 7, at N.J. STAT. ANN. 17:48-6x (West 2008).

18 668 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 require disease and only requires a period of unprotected intercourse. 80 Consequently, California s statute does not necessarily eliminate gay or unmarried persons. On the contrary, this requirement could exclude persons who are heterosexual and married if they failed to engage in unprotected sex. However, the applicability of the statute to gay and unmarried persons may differ from its applicability to heterosexual married for a number of reasons. First, same sex couples may not attempt unprotected sex because their intercourse is not intended for procreative purposes, and unmarried persons may not engage in sexual intercourse, protected or unprotected, because they do not have a partner with whom they wish to procreate. Thus, while either a same sex couple or unmarried person may wish to reproduce, unprotected intercourse may not be an avenue that is possible or desirable. 81 Second, it is unclear the extent to which the statute requires monogamous sexual intercourse. As an example, a single person could engage in heterosexual unprotected sexual activity with a variety of partners over a period of years without becoming pregnant, but this could be due to infertility of the partners or infrequency of intercourse, as opposed to the infertility of the individual. Furthermore, the same requirements apply to medico-structurally infertile persons. Regardless of whether they are gay or unmarried, medico-structurally infertile individuals only qualify for mandated insurance coverage if they engage in intercourse and the intercourse is unprotected. 82 This requirement has interesting implications for both structurally and medicostructurally infertile persons, given that protection may be used during sex for both pregnancy prevention and prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) an issue which will be discussed in greater detail later in this paper. 80. CAL. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE (b) (West 2008). 81. Importantly, a requirement that a couple engage in unprotected sex is also unusual in circumstances where individuals have known infertility, such as an instance where a woman has a cancer-related hysterectomy. While the unprotected sex requirement is likely in place to ensure that individuals who can achieve natural pregnancy do so, it serves as a unique burden for those who already know that intercourse will not achieve their reproductive goals. 82. N.J. STAT. ANN. 17:48-6x (West 2008).

19 2011] IT S AN ART NOT A SCIENCE Statutes That Require Number Of Years Of Infertility Perhaps the most inclusive statutory language defines infertility as the condition of a presumably healthy individual who is unable to conceive or produce conception or sustain a successful pregnancy during a one-year period. 83 Connecticut, 84 Massachusetts, 85 and Rhode Island 86 all use this language in their statutes, and New Jersey, while also requiring unprotected intercourse, also uses the condition language. 87 While Rhode Island s language also requires that the presumably healthy individual be married, 88 thus eliminating all forms of structurally infertile persons, the statutes of Connecticut and Massachusetts offer the broadest language and greatest chance for inclusion of structurally infertile persons. In these two states, the statutory language does not require any type of medical cause for the infertility, nor does it require that there be unprotected intercourse or an abnormal functioning of the reproductive system. Given the breadth of these statutes, structurally infertile persons and medico-structurally infertile persons who have not reproduced in a certain period of time may qualify in the same manner as heterosexual individuals, depending on the interpretation of the term condition. If, as one scholar argues, homosexuality could easily be included as a condition that would prevent a healthy individual from reproducing, 89 then structurally infertile persons would be covered under these types of mandates. However, a court could interpret the term condition as meaning a medical condition that prevented pregnancy. Furthermore, it is unclear what the statues mean by the term condition and whether there are certain efforts which must be made during that year period to prove infertility, or, alternatively, whether one must simply live for a year without producing pregnancy. This language is, however, 83. CONN. GEN. STAT. ANN 38a-536 (West 2007). 84. Id. 85. MASS. GEN. LAWS ANN. ch. 175, 47H (LexisNexis 2008) ( [I]nfertility shall mean the condition of a presumably healthy individual who is unable to conceive or produce conception during a period of one year. ). 86. R.I. GEN. LAWS (2008) ( [I]nfertility means the condition of an otherwise presumably healthy married individual who is unable to conceive or sustain a pregnancy during a period of one year. ). 87. N.J. STAT. ANN. 17:48-6x (West 2008). 88. R.I. GEN. LAWS (2008). 89. Rank, supra note 7, at

20 670 MINN. J. L. SCI. & TECH. [Vol. 12:2 the broadest statutory language and offers the greatest hope for inclusion of the structurally and medico-structurally infertile. The language in these statutes also presents another interesting question about the definition of infertility: Can an individual who has never engaged in intercourse (or not recently engaged in intercourse) claim to be infertile because he or she has not procreated? Because this statutory language does not explicitly require intercourse, but does require infertility, this issue is unclear. 3. Statutes That Use Spouse Language Regulations in Hawaii, 90 Maryland, 91 and Texas 92 all require that a patient s eggs be fertilized with her spouse s sperm and, thus, strictly eliminate the possibility that single or gay persons can be covered under the mandates. 93 Similarly, Rhode Island, as discussed above, requires marriage for coverage under its mandate. 94 Strictly limiting coverage to those who engage in heterosexual, married relationships, [t]here is no question... that the [Texas] statute does not require coverage of assisted reproductive technologies for single parents or unmarried couples (which encompasses lesbians, [where] homosexual marriage is not recognized... ). 95 Furthermore, gay couples would not qualify because they cannot provide both an egg and sperm, as the statutory wording requires. Unmarried heterosexual persons are also excluded based on the marriage requirement. In addition, medico-structurally infertile persons are excluded because of the spouse language and the requirement of heterosexual gametes. It is important to note that, regardless of statutory 90. HAW. REV. STAT. 431:10A (2005). 91. MD. CODE ANN., INS (LexisNexis 2006). 92. TEX. INS. CODE ANN. Art (West 2009). 93. Hawaii, Maryland, and Texas all have language in their statutes which states that insurance need only cover forms of ART where the patient s eggs are fertilized with spouse s sperm. See HAW. REV. STAT. 431:10A (2005); MD. CODE ANN., INS (LexisNexis 2006). Similarly, the Rhode Island statute defines fertility as the condition of an otherwise healthy married individual who is unable to conceive. R.I. GEN. LAWS (2008) (emphasis added). This marriage requirement again naturally eliminates same sex couples and the unmarried. 94. R.I. GEN. LAWS (2008). 95. Rank, supra note 7, at

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